Everything about 34th Street Manhattan totally explained
34th Street is a major cross-town street in the
New York City borough of
Manhattan, connecting the
Lincoln Tunnel and
Queens-Midtown Tunnel. Like many of New York City's major crosstown streets, it has its own bus lines (M16 and M34) and four
subway stops serving the, and trains at
Eighth Avenue, the, and trains at
Seventh Avenue, the,,,,,,, and
PATH trains at
Herald Square, and the train at
Park Avenue.
A walk down 34th Street, west to east
At the west end of the street one finds the
Hudson River, the
New York Waterway ferry dock, the West 34th Street Heliport, the
Hudson River Greenway, the
West Side Highway, and the
Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, New York City's main convention center. On the West Side, 34th Street is in the neighborhood
Hell's Kitchen and overlooks the West Side railway yard. On Tenth Avenue is a
McDonald's with a
drive-through and (a rarity in Manhattan) its own small parking lot. On Ninth is
B&H Photo Video, a large retailer of photographic and electronic equipment.
Further east at Eighth and 33d, the Post Office and the new
Penn Station dominate on the south side of the street, and one may catch
Amtrak trains to destinations all over the United States and Canada. Above Penn Station sits
Madison Square Garden, which calls itself "the world's most famous arena". The grand stairs of the
James Farley Post Office are built on the scale of the old (and much missed) Penn Station. The architecture of the post office gives a flavor of what the area was like in the height of the railroad era.
34th Street is a major shopping street. Though it endured a decline in the 1970s, it rebounded late in the 20th century with new stores and new energy. A giant video board and light display at 34th and Broadway is like a mini
Times Square. Between
Seventh Avenue and
Broadway, one will find
Macy's, the famous department store immortalized in the
Christmas movie
Miracle on 34th Street. It claims to be the "world's largest store." The annual
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade ends on 34th Street. A block south of 34th, at
Sixth Avenue and 33d, is the
Manhattan Mall, an indoor
shopping mall built inside what had been the flagship location of the
Gimbel's department store. Branches of large chain stores also operate between 8th and 5th Avenues.
East of
Herald Square and the hectic shopping district, the influence of the East Side and the sedate corporate office towers of the neighborhoods
Kips Bay and
Murray Hill starts to take hold. On
Fifth Avenue one finds the
Empire State Building. The tallest building in the city, it stands on a rare ledge of solid
Manhattan schist dominating the skyline. At the far end one finds bulky luxury residential buildings and a great number of dogs patronizing the pet care parlors that serve the pure-bred loving populations of Kips Bay, which is the name of both the neighborhood and its eponymous bend in the
East River where 34th Street ends. At the riverbank are
FDR Drive, the
East River Greenway for bicycling to the south end of Manhattan, a filling station, a small parking lot for
New York University, docks for ferries to New Jersey and elsewhere, and Stuyvesant Cove Park.
Places along 34th Street
Places located along 34th Street include (from west to east):
Intersections from east to west
FDR Drive
First Avenue
Second Avenue
Third Avenue
Lexington Avenue
Park Avenue
Madison Avenue
Fifth Avenue - East 34th Street becomes West 34th Street
Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas)
Broadway
Seventh Avenue
Eighth Avenue
Ninth Avenue
Dyer Avenue - Lincoln Tunnel access
Tenth Avenue
Eleventh Avenue
West Side Highway
Subway stations
34th Street–Herald Square (New York City Subway)
34th Street–Penn Station (IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line)
34th Street–Penn Station (IND Eighth Avenue Line)Further Information
Get more info on '34th Street Manhattan'.
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